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BIDEAUXITE

THE MINERAL BIDEAUXITE

Bideauxite was named for American mineralogist Richard A. Bideaux. Its type locality of Mammoth-St Anthony Mine, Tiger, Pinal County, Arizona, USA is famous for wonderful lead minerals. Other lead minerals from here include phosgenite, murdochite, crocoite, ramsdellite, vanadinite, dioptase, wherryite, creaseyite, pinalite, matlockite, cerussite, anglesite, boleite, leadhillite and galena. Bideauxite forms from the alteration of boleite crystals. The boleite in turn formed from the original lead sulfide ores.

Bideauxite is a beautiful mineral. It forms well shaped cubic crystals that look like fluorite cubes. The color however is more variable than most fluorite specimens which are either strongly colored or colorless, but usually not both. In bideauxite, there can be deep purple colors in the crystal cores with strikingly colorless exteriors. Also in the same specimens there can be deeply colored cubes nested beside perfectly colorless cubes. The lack of cleavage and greater density for bideauxite are diagnostic in distinguishing it from fluorite. Unfortunately for collectors, bideauxite is extremely rare and hard to find on the mineral market.

Bideauxite and others minerals with similar chemistries belong to a division in the Halide Class called the Oxyhalides and Hydroxyhalides. These minerals have either oxygen or hydroxide groups in their chemistries. The oxygen atom in their chemistries might require their classification in the Oxides Class of minerals except that their structures are more tied to the halide elements and the oxygens and hydroxides are kind of superfluous to the overall structure. Some other members of the Oxyhalides and Hydroxyhalides include boleite, chloroxiphite, kelyanite, botallackite, laurionite, paralaurionite, mendipite, fiedlerite, pinchite, penfieldite, yedlinite, atacamite, koenenite, diaboleite, zirklerite and paratacamite. Of these, only atacamite and boleite are common enough to be seen at rock shows and in rock shops with regularity.